Reuters Blogs

Oddly Enough

News, but not the serious kind

07:27 September 25th, 2006

It’s just not cricket to order anything else…

Posted by: Robert Basler
Tags: Uncategorized

The plastic-covered menu at this restaurant offers the kind of limited selection you find in the famous Monty Python spam sketch.  Let’s see, we’ve got young crickets deep fried, cricket salad, breaded cricket, cricket noodle and peppered cricket. 

In other words, you don’t come here for the burgers. 

But then, why would you need anything else in a country where crickets are now being described as finger food for beer drinkers.” Grant McCool reports:cricket300.jpg

 

                                                             

 

 

 

Le Thanh Tung picks up a fried cricket with his noodles at his farm in Ho Chi Minh city September 13, 2006. REUTERS/Kham  

7 comments so far

Waiter. There’s noodles in my crickets.

- Posted by Shawn Hendricks

Nobody likes me.
Everybody hates me.
I’m gonna eat some worms
And crickets.

- Posted by Shawn Hendricks

A waiter with a pen and thinking quickly, turned what should have been an awkward situation into a business bonanza!

- Posted by Shawn Hendricks

Le Thanh Tung went out of business, trying to replace those wee little lassos.

- Posted by Shawn Hendricks

Ugh. You didn’t de-vein another one.

- Posted by Shawn Hendricks

I love the flavor but I hate getting those mineature canes, top-hats and tuxedos in my teeth.

- Posted by Shawn Hendricks

bugs are good to eat try some

- Posted by Horus

Post Your Comment

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture. Click on the picture to hear an audio file of the word.
Click to hear an audio file of the anti-spam word

House Rules:
  • We moderate all comments and will publish everything that advances the post directly or with relevant tangential information
  • We try not to publish comments that we think are offensive or appear to pass you off as another person, and we will be conservative if comments may be considered libelous information.